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On June 1, 2001, Crown
Prince Dipendra of Nepal shot and killed his father, mother, brother,
sister and five other members of the royal family, including himself.
For most observers, the massacre was an unfathomable atrocity. But as
Gregson shows in this labyrinthine analysis of Nepal's monarchy, the
catastrophe was wholly in keeping with the family's bloody history. The
Shah dynasty first consolidated power over Nepal in the late 1700s, and
the succeeding generations saw courtly intrigues, exiles, executions and
palace bloodbaths (including the 1846 Kot Massacre, in which over 30
aristocrats and extended royalty perished). More than one junior queen
was forced to perform sati (ritual immolation) so that she could not
provide an alternate line of heirs to the throne. The weight of this
tortured ancestry, Gregson maintains, came fully to bear on Prince
Dipendra. Prohibited from marrying the woman he loved, he became
increasingly frustrated and infatuated with alcohol, hashish and guns;
eventually he decided to destroy his "dysfunctional family" with a
shotgun and an M-16. Gregson, a British journalist born and raised in
Calcutta, knows his subject well. Unfortunately, many readers will find
themselves lost in the first half of the book, which meticulously tracks
200 years of obscure dynastic politics. The concluding sections are more
intelligible and dramatic, however, especially the massacre scene
itself. Overall, this is a fine resource for anyone with a serious
interest in a terrible royal tragedy. 8 pages of b&w photos not seen by
PW. |